Synod
Father lists three points important for summary document
(Vatican Radio) Ahead of the presentation of the Synod’s final
summary document, to be discussed and voted on Saturday afternoon by Synod
participants, Synod Father Archbishop Paul-André Durocher shared with Vatican
Radio some of the key points he thinks are important to include.
The first is the organization of all pastoral life in the Church
in a way that includes the family, and not just having family as a segment of
pastoral life, said the president of the Canadian Conference of Catholic
Bishops.
The second is a pastoral approach that includes “the ability to
see and develop what is good, even in situations that do not correspond to the
ideal of the Church”.
Offering single-parent families and divorced and re-married
couples as examples, he said: “There is much good going on there and we, as a
Church, need to welcome that good and we need to support it.”
Addressing concerns previously expressed about how to bridge
doctrine and ministry, he said the third key point is that issues related to
Church and family are “not about justice versus mercy or about doctrine versus
ministry”.
“These are not separate things in the life of the Church,” he
continued. “We need to be able to find a way forward, where we see our doctrine
as being full of mercy and we see the exercise of mercy rooted in our doctrine.”
The challenge, he said, is to tell the truth with hope. “That
challenge is named in the relatio and I would like to see that continued on in
the final document,” he offered.
STILL NEEDS WORK
The
Archbishop of Gatineau, Quebec, also underlined two areas in the relatio, which
he felt were problematic and needed working on.
“One bishop proposed a way of looking at the goodness that is in
less-than-ideal situations in a way that would be analogous to the way that we
look at Christian churches and ecclesial communities that are not fully in
communion with the Catholic Church. This was developed, the idea of elements of
ecclesiality,” he said. “I think that approach is problematic. Many bishops do
and they feel that this is not the way forward, so we need to (work on) that.”
“The other thing is the language of graduality… what do we mean by
that?” he said. “We need to define more clearly what we mean by graduality.”
CONTEXT LACKING IN MEDIA
On
his personal blog, Archbishop Durocher had lamented the publication of the
relatio prior to the language group discussions.
“My problem is not with the publishing of documents per se,” he
explained. “I think it’s good that it be open. The problem is the lack of
context in which it is released, the fact that a lot of media do not understand
what is going on.”
Inaccurate headlines in Canadian newspapers about the relatio led
some “very puzzled” Canadians to write him through social media and ask him
what was happening at the Synod, “creating a certain amount of anxiety” among
some Catholics, he reported.
He said his other concern about the media reporting “is the
feeling that we could end up responding to the media rather than responding to
the actual situation of families in the world. And what we need to be doing is
focusing on what we are here about. It is the families and it is the challenges
of the Christian families in the context of new evangelization.”
WHAT NEXT?
Archbishop
Durocher said the Synod’s summary document will be discussed on Saturday and
voted on, but it will likely be some time before the final version is
published.
“We’ve been told, this document becomes the basis for reflection
and for dialogue in view of next year’s Synod,” he said. “But right away I feel
a certain disconnect because this document is about the pastoral challenges of
the family in the context of the new evangelization and the Pope has given a
slightly different twist to next year’s Synod. He’s called for a reflection on
the vocation and the mission of the Christian family in the Church and in the
world, which is another aspect.
“So how does this document become the preparation for the next
Synod? I think we’re going to have to look at that a bit more closely. I’m
hoping the Secretariat of the Synod will be able to enlighten us on this
issue,” he added.
In the meantime, Archbishop Durocher said he has already called
for a videoconference with the executive of the Canadian bishops conference so
that “we can start right away brainstorming as to what are the next steps.”
He said he expects laymen and laywomen will be involved in the
reflection, leading up to next year’s Synod.
Report and interview by Laura
Ieraci
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